“MAMAK” AND MALAYSIAN The Indian Muslim Quest for Identity

Transcription

“MAMAK” AND MALAYSIAN The Indian Muslim Quest for Identity
Reproduced from Yearning to Belong: Malaysia's Indian Muslims, Chitties, Portuguese Eurasians, Peranakan
Chinese and Baweanese, by Patrick Pillai (Singapore: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute, 2015). This version was
obtained electronically direct from the publisher on condition that copyright is not infringed. No part of this
publication may be reproduced without the prior permission of ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute.
Individual chapters are available at <http://bookshop.iseas.edu.sg>.
1
“MAMAK” AND MALAYSIAN
The Indian Muslim Quest for Identity
INTRODUCTION
Heritage Heartland: Chulia Street, Penang
To understand the story of the Indian Muslims I travel to George Town,
Penang, and head for Chulia Street where Indian Muslim immigrants have
lived for generations. The town-bus driver is a middle-aged Penang Indian
Muslim who, reflecting Penang’s ethnic diversity, speaks to his passengers
in Malay, English, Tamil and Hokkien. The area is dominated by jewellers,
money-changers, wholesale book traders, restaurants and superb examples
of South Indian Muslim architecture, including the Nagore Shrine (1801)
and the mid-nineteenth century Noordin Tomb. But the heart and soul of
the community is reflected in its beautiful two-century old Kapitan Kling
Mosque on nearby Pitt Street.1
At the mosque entrance I am greeted by Akbar,2 a twenty-two-year-old
Indian Muslim mosque official who is a preacher by day and trader by
night (Interview, 5 April 2008). He offers me respite from the intense heat
with a glass of susu bandung, a refreshing concoction of rose syrup, milk
and crushed ice. Urbane, self-confident and knowledgeable, he reveals
that his father is an immigrant Indian Muslim, his mother Malay. “Do you
see yourself as Indian Muslim, or Malay?” I ask. He replies immediately,
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but in a slow, deliberate fashion, as if to obliterate all other definitions,
“I…am… a…Muslim.” He appears to have solved that ambivalence
— that inner tension which is often the lot of members of minorities
who inhabit contested ethnic spaces — by defining himself in clear,
unambiguous terms — in this case, purely as a Muslim rather than an
Indian Muslim or Malay. He takes me on a tour of the mosque and invites
me to observe the congregation in prayer. The diversity of its worshippers
is striking — young and old, rich and poor, and from every corner of
the Indian continent — but they all respond to the imam’s call to prayer
in harmony, as one community. It is a moving sight. Akbar hands me
some reading material as I bid farewell. “Hope you find this interesting”,
he says, smiling.
As I continue walking down Pitt Street I notice a Chinese man praying
to a Hindu deity at a tree-shrine. I pass the Taoist Goddess of Mercy Temple
(1801), St George’s Church (1818) and the Hindu Mariamman Temple
(1833). The world’s four major religions are represented on this one street.
Soon I am hungry, and follow my nose. I wander into a tiny Chinese
coffeeshop located directly in front of the Hokkien Temple on Armenian
Street. Outside the shop an old “Mamak” (Indian Muslim) hawker fries
noodles over a trusty wok. Mamak mee (noodles) is a Penang specialty.
Noodles are fried with onions, garlic, chilli, bean sprouts and an egg,
garnished with fried crisps and a squeeze of lime. This Chinese dish, first
adapted by Indian Muslims to cater to Malay customers, is now enjoyed
by all ethnic groups throughout the country, and is a fine example of the
hybrid cuisine that has developed in Penang over centuries.
I enjoy a plateful, and after lunch my mind returns to Akbar. His
zealousness in trade and religion is part of an Indian link to the region
which goes back thousands of years. His immigrant Indian Muslim
father was merely following a well-trodden route long taken by Indians
before him — first to Kedah and Malacca, and later to Penang. Today
Penang has the oldest, largest, most diverse and vibrant Indian Muslim
community in the country. Malaysia’s Indian Muslims are enumerated
as either Malays or Indians, and no accurate statistics are available on
their numbers or socio-economic position. However community leaders
estimate that Indian Muslims, most of whom are Tamils, comprise about
10 per cent or 200,000 of Malaysia’s total Indian population of two million.3
The community’s past impact and current influence on Malaysian society
and culture is best appreciated by examining its historical links to the
Malay Peninsula.
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SHARED HISTORIES: FACTORS FACILITATING
ACCULTURATION AND ASSIMILATION
Pre-Colonial Indian Links: Kedah and Malacca
Early Indian influence extended to most of Southeast Asia, as evidenced
by the huge temple complexes of Angkor (Cambodia), Pagan (Burma),
Borobudur (Java) (Tate 2008, p. 4) and the first-century Bujang Valley
civilization in Kedah. Peninsular Malaysia’s strategic location amidst
international trade routes resulted in cosmopolitan ports which became
nodes — first for Hindu, then Buddhist and finally Muslim religious
scholarship and influence (Ghulam-Sarwar 2001, pp. 1–2). Scholars have
long known that from the third century, the region’s main port was located
in Kedah, and due to regular visits and settlement by Indian traders, it
became the centre of the first Indian community in the Peninsula (Fujimoto
1989, pp. 10–13). However recent digs in Kedah’s Bujang Valley have
uncovered 1st century Sanskrit Pallava inscriptions and temples, a jetty
and an iron smelter (Haslam 2010).4
More important than the physical evidence is the cultural impact of
India. The sub-continent’s influences on the region — including Malaysia
— are clearly evident in the daily lives of people through the large number
of Sanskrit words in local languages and Indian influences in concepts
of royalty and protocol, customs, literature, drama and other art forms
(Tate 2008, p. 4).
In the ninth and tenth century, Kedah — then a dependency of
Srivijaya — was visited by Muslim traders from the Coromandel Coast
in southeastern India. They exchanged Indian textiles and rice for pepper,
tin and aromatic woods from the region. These early Indian Muslims
had more influence in promoting trade than in disseminating Islam,
which became a force after the rise of Malacca in the fifteenth century
(Fujimoto 1989, pp. 2–3). Many scholars agree that it is these later Indian
Muslim traders and missionaries who brought Islam to the Peninsula
via Indonesia and Malacca — thus transforming Malay and, eventually,
Malaysian society (Fujimoto 1989, pp. 6–8; Nagata 2006, p. 514). Penang
had contact with these traders because it was historically and culturally
a part of Kedah from as early as the fourth century (Ghulam-Sarwar
2001, p. 3).
The second Indian community developed in Malacca when its ruler
Parameswara became a Muslim in 1414. One of the key factors behind
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Malacca’s prominence was the active role of Gujarati, Coromandel and
Malabar Coast traders who exchanged Indian textiles for regional spices,
which they sold to Europeans. The Gujarati were the most influential
but the Tamil Muslims comprised the largest group of both traders and
settlers (Fujimoto 1989, pp. 9–11). Their political influence hinged on their
ability to maintain good relations with Malacca’s foreign merchants, “their
skilled diplomacy as the intermediary between the Sultan and the traders,
and the administration of trade upon which the wealth and security of
the Sultan was founded” (Fujimoto 1989, p. 70). The fall of Malacca to the
Portuguese in 1511 and the Dutch in 1641 diverted Indian Muslim trade
to Aceh, which remained important to the Straits Settlements, especially
to Penang (Fujimoto 1989, pp. 17–18) right up to 1786 when Francis Light
established a trading post there.
Colonial Immigration: Penang’s Indian Muslim Settlers
From as early as the eighteenth century, Penang was the first port of
disembarkation for most Indian immigrants boarding ships from the
eastern port cities of Calcutta in Bengal and Nagapattinam, located in a
Tamil Nadu coastal district with the same name. The immigration streams
from India to Penang fed into the specialized labour demands of a growing
colonial trading port. Family and friends arrived through a process of
chain migration, taking up niche occupations through recommendations
or via labour recruiters.
These workers came from family-inherited occupations which also
reflected clan, caste and class backgrounds. There were further sub-divisions
linked to diverse regional origins (village, town, and district) and religious
identities (sects, leaders and spiritual paths). For example, those from
Kadayanallur in Tamil Nadu — who formed the single largest group of
Indian Muslim immigrants with families — were associated with manual
work. Muslims from the Malabar Coast — popularly referred to as Kakas
— were in petty trading and hawking, while the Chulias — merchants
from the Coromandel Coast — were involved in import-export, shipping,
and jewellery. In addition, there were northern Indian Muslim merchants
from Kashmir, Bengal, Gujarat and Sindh (Nagata 2006, p. 518).
In Penang, as in Malacca earlier, each group — following their regional,
language and caste origins — clustered around particular residential
enclaves dominated by their own mosque and religious endowment land
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or wakaf (Nagata 2006, pp. 515–16; Ghulam 2001, pp. 6–7). Thus a dazzling
diversity of immigrants from the Indian sub-continent was transplanted
onto Penang’s economic and social fabric.
These mostly Tamil Muslim immigrants into Penang should be
distinguished from the thousands of indentured Tamil-Hindu plantation
workers who arrived a century later and whose descendants now comprise
the majority of the Peninsula’s Indians. These plantation workers entered
via the Straits Settlements after 1872, and flowed into the Protected Malay
States after 1884, when the British legalized Indian immigration to these
areas (Andaya 1982, p. 178).
(a) Early Arrivals: Traders, Money-Lenders, Labourers
Penang’s Tamil immigrants were not homogenous but belonged to at
least six highly diverse groups which arrived separately over a century,
beginning in 1786 when Francis Light established a trading post in
Penang, says local historian N. Meera (Interviews, April–June 2008).5 It
is well known that Tamil settlers, traders and labourers were among the
first to arrive when Light founded the settlement (Amrith 2009, p. 549).
According to Meera, some Tamil Muslims accompanied Light from India,
and within three days of his landing another 150 Tamil Muslim traders
arrived on small wooden boats or tongkangs from Kedah.6 To encourage
them to settle Light gave them land, says Meera, who has seen one such
land grant. “As soon as they got land in the Market Street and Pitt Street
area they cleared the jungle, built huts and set up businesses trading in
nails, ropes and sails, among other items. For water they dug wells, one
of which still exists behind the Light Street Convent.”
The second group of immigrants, who were Hindus, comprised
Nattukotai Chettiars, a clan of money-lenders who preceded modern
banking and played an important role in the rise of colonial capitalism in
Southeast Asia. “They came with gold coins from Siam, Phuket, Sri Lanka
and Burma, which they used to grant loans to capital-short British traders
in Penang,” says Meera.
The third group comprised Chulia-Muslim traders who arrived from
Aceh, where they were well established. The British welcomed them and
trade boomed (Meera 2008). The fourth group comprised labourers. To
cope with a labour shortage caused by the boom, from as early as 1794
thousands of Tamil Muslim labourers arrived annually for sojourns lasting
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months or years. These workers entered under the patronage of Chulia
traders, who advanced their passage costs and linked them to employers
in Singapore and Penang. By the 1820s, Tamil settlers comprised the
largest single group in George Town (Amrith 2009, pp. 550, 556). Roughly
three-quarters of the recruited workers in this fourth group came from the
village of Nagore, and the descendants of these workers settled in what
is now called Little India in George Town, says Meera. The 1801 Nagore
Memorial in Chulia Street — the oldest Indian Muslim memorial on the
island and a miniature of the original in Nagore — is dedicated to their
thirteenth-century Muslim saint Syed Shahul Hamid.
The fifth batch of immigrants arrived between 1790–1873 when Penang
was a penal station for India and convicts from penal settlements in the
Andamans, Madras, and Calcutta were brought in to alleviate the labour
shortage. In 1825 alone a batch of 900 was interned at “Chowrasta Lines”,
a Penang Road prison where they were trained in construction skills. It has
recently been suggested that many of these prisoners were not convicted
criminals but anti-colonial political exiles (Khoo 2009, p. 104), a fascinating
claim which merits further research. Among them were Malabaris who
built Penang’s public roads, buildings and elite Muslim homes, and Sufi
Muslims who constructed the seventy Muslim shrines of Penang. They
lived in Kampung Malabar in the city and intermingled with the Tamils,
but they brought their achi (brides) and nanak (grooms) from Kerala.7
Others became petty traders in Chowrasta Market. These labourers had
a saintly leader and upon his death a tomb and Muslim shrine were built
on Dato Koya Road, which is named after him.
The 1833 census recorded about 11,000 settlers of Indian origin
among Penang Island’s 40,322 population, of which 7,886 were Chulias
and 1,322 Bengalese (Newbold 1971, pp. 54–55, 96, quoted in Khoo 2009,
p. 104). Most of the Indians were workers; a minority comprised traders.
Many of the larger traders descended from inter-marriages between
Arab merchants and Tamils from the Coromandel Coast, but in India
they had maintained their clan-related occupational specializations after
conversion. They included the coastal Marakaryar (who were once sailors,
shipbuilders and shipowners), and inland Rawther (horse traders and
cavalrymen) and Lebai (religious teachers). The Marakayars (later called
Mericans) financed the building of the Kapitan Kling Mosque (1802),
while other Indian Muslim merchants sponsored the construction of the
Nagore Memorial in Chulia Street.
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(b) Later Arrivals: Kadayanallur Immigrants
The sixth and largest group — who arrived with their families and to
whom many of today’s Penang Indian Muslims trace their ancestry —
entered after 1882, almost a century after the arrival of the Chulia traders
and Tamil workers. They originated from the tiny poverty-stricken village
of Kadayanallur in Tirunelveli District, Tamil Nadu. This was a village of
handloom weavers hit by massive retrenchments during the Industrial
Revolution, when machines replaced handlooms. Unemployment and
poverty was worsened by famine, which drove thousands of families to
Penang. They were soon followed by some families from Thenkasi, sixteen
kilometres from Kadayannallur (Khoo 2001a).
Meera says the Kadayanallur people travelled for one week on a
newly-built British train before arriving in Nagapattinam Port. Here they
lived in labour camps before undertaking the eleven-day journey on
the “Negapat Line”, a Dutch ship leased by a British company. Due to
miscommunication — possibly linked to profit-hungry labour recruiters —
the British were unprepared for the arrival of the first batch of 200 families
and they remained destitute for months until they were granted pull-cart
licences to transport goods for shipping firms. “Unlike other immigrants
who could afford to leave their families behind, our people were so poor
that they were forced to bring along their wives and children despite an
uncertain future in Penang,” recalls Haja Mohideen, 57, a George Town
petty trader whose father was part of the Kadayanallur immigrant cohort
(Interviews, 7, 8 April 2008) (See interview in Appendix 1.1).
Bereft of a trading background, many Kadayanallur folk merely secured
low-paid menial jobs in cargo handling, construction and road sweeping.
Others apprenticed as petty traders with business-savvy Malabaris (also
called “Kakas”)8 hawking food, including teh tarik (pulled tea) and roti canai
(flatbread). Both food items, highly popular among Malaysians today, were
pioneered by the Malabaris, says Meera. Kadayanallur women specialized
in making rempah giling (grounded spices) and fresh curry paste, popularly
enjoyed today in Penang’s famous nasi kandar. The vendors were usually
Tamil males from Ramnath District who carried two baskets, one of rice
and another of curry, slung on a bakau (mangrove) wood yoke (Khoo 2001a).
As a result of full family formations, the Kadayanallur community
comprised three large endogamous groups, each with its own sheikh
(religious teacher), tarikat (spiritual path), and association. For many years
these were considered different clans but today there is intermingling and
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intermarriage between them. In 1929 a group formed by descendants of a
sheikh organized themselves under the United Muslim Association, which
still has its own building and hall on Transfer Road. In the 1930s another
group formed the Anjuman Himayathul Association, with a mosque and
madrasah in Chulia Street. In 1941 a third cluster established the Hidayathul
Islam Association on Kedah Road. All three groups set up the Kadayanallur
Muslim Association (KMA) in 1945 (Khoo 2001a; Najmudeen 2007, pp.
14–21). The KMA is still active and was in the news when Malaysia’s exPrime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad — who has Penang Indian Muslim
heritage — addressed them in late 2009 (Bernama, 24 December 2009).
Half a century ago most Kadayanallur Indian Muslims were clustered
around the Hutton Lane area — in the vicinity of Transfer, Halfway,
Ariffin, Kedah and Argyll Roads — in addition to locations surrounding
the present Chowrasta Market. Today only about a quarter of them are
still in these areas; the rest are dispersed across the island and the Penang
mainland (Interview, Mydin Sultan, 17 June 2008). In 2001 it was estimated
that Penang had 20,000 Kadayanallur and 5,000 Tengkasi Tamil Muslims
(Khoo 2001a).
CULTURE AND IDENTITY: INDIAN MUSLIM
IMPACT AND INFLUENCE
Historical Impact on Religion, Leadership, Trade
The impact of the Indian Muslims on Malaysian — particularly Malay
— culture is far greater than other ethnic minorities due to their early
historical links, their influential economic and political role, and a common
religion, which has made cultural assimilation with Malays easier (Ghulam
2001, p. 8). Indian Muslims played an important role in drawing the
Peninsula into global trade networks, introducing Islam, pioneering
Malay and Tamil publications, establishing mosques and bequeathing
religious endowments.
(a) The Legacy of Islam: Religion and Built Heritage
The greatest legacy of the Indian Muslims is their introduction of Islam to
the Peninsula. Greater geographical proximity, numbers and inter-marriage
meant that South Indian Muslims had a greater impact in Islamizing Malay
courts compared to Arab, Gujerati and Chinese Muslims (Khoo 2009, p. 98).
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Over the centuries Indian Muslims built mosques in almost every
town where they settled in Peninsular Malaysia. Today virtually every
state capital, district centre and small town in Peninsular Malaysia has
a Tamil Muslim mosque. For example, “the Ipoh Indian Muslim mosque
is a century-old and even the tiny rural town of Ijok in Selangor has a
120-year-old Tamil Muslim mosque,” notes Fidha Ulla, a journalist with
the Kuala Lumpur-based Indian Muslim magazine, Nambikai9 (Interview,
17 June 2008).
In Penang each Indian Muslim immigrant group clustered around
residential areas dominated by their own religious endowment land
or wakaf. The wakaf have helped preserve much of Penang’s Muslim
built-heritage, including mosques, cemeteries, mausoleums, “compound
houses”, bungalows, shophouses and association buildings10 (Khoo 2009,
p. 109). Large numbers of Indian Muslims settled around the city, as
reflected in today’s rich and diverse examples of South Indian mosques,
many built in the 1800s. Almost one third of the sixty-eight mosques
in Penang were founded by Indian Muslims (Nagata 2006, p. 516). As
mentioned earlier, Penang’s Indian Muslim influence is well reflected in
its splendid two-century old Kapitan Kling Mosque (1802) in Pitt Street.
The street, dominated by Indian Muslims from colonial times, still has
a very strong Indian Muslim presence in its religious shrines, jewellers,
money-changers, retailers and wholesalers, book traders and restaurants.
Shop names like Othman Pillai and Habib Jewels are landmarks here.
(Appendix 1.2)
In addition Penang has the greatest concentration of keramat (shrines).
These are based on certain interpretations of Sufism (Islamic mysticism),
which came to the Peninsula from the Middle East via South Asia and
Indonesia. Numbering seventy at its peak, today there are about fifteen
active shrines, including the Nagore Shrine (Ghulam-Sarwar 2001).
“Penang’s Indian Muslim mosques and shrines reflect the diversity
of South Asian Islam,” writes Dr Ghulam-Sarwar. “Together with the
surrounding development in Pitt Street and Buckingham Street, it creates
the sort of traditional ambience encountered in similar settings with
large populations of South Asian Muslims such as Old Delhi, Lahore,
Singapore or Rangoon,” he observes. The Bengali (1803) and Alimsah
(1811) Mosques, the Rawana, Hashim Yahya and Pakistan Mosques,
together with those on Prangin and Pahang Road are other examples of
the diversity of South Asian Islam. These mosques have also contributed
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to inter-ethnic interaction by operating as cultural centres, with libraries
open to all ethnic and religious groups.
(b) Political and Intellectual Leadership
The Tamil Muslims from the Coromandel Coast, like the Arabs from
Hadramaut, traded extensively, were influential in commerce and the
courts, moved easily between cultures, and helped Muslim missionaries
spread Islam to Malacca and the region. Many Indian Muslims rose to
high office. Among powerful Indian Muslims during the time of the
Melaka Sultanate was Tun Mutahir (1500–10) the Bendahara, a post with
functions of the prime minister, treasurer and chief of justice combined.
His daughter was consort to the Sultan, and his grandson, Raja Alauddin
Syah, later became Sultan.
During British rule, a person of Indian (and Arab) origin who had a
great impact on Malay thought was Munshi Abdullah (1796–1854). An
intellectual, his book on his travels through the region (1838) and his
biography (1840) provide a rare glimpse of the Malay Muslim world of
the nineteenth century (Noor 2009).
In the early twentieth century, a gentleman named Mohamad Iskandar,
who was a Jawi Peranakan — a locally-born Muslim with Indian blood —
moved from Penang to Kedah, where he became the respected headmaster
of Alor Star’s first English school. He married a Kedah Malay, Wan
Tempawan Wan Hanafi, and the youngest of their nine children, Mahathir
bin Mohamad, a doctor, rose to become Malaysia’s longest-serving and
most influential Prime Minister from 1981–2003 (Morais 1982; Wain 2009,
pp. 4–5; Mahathir Mohamad 2012, p. 14).
Indian Muslims also played the role of intellectual intermediaries
between ethnic groups by publishing the Peninsula’s first newspapers,
which enjoyed a multi-ethnic readership. In the early nineteenth century,
some Straits Settlement-born Indian Muslims and Jawi Peranakan who
were exposed to Malay and English print media through urban schools,
apprenticed at government and missionary presses. They later owned
and ran hand-lithographed presses, publishing religious and secular
works in Malay. In the first thirty years of the Malay Press, at least sixteen
Malay-language journals — seven in Singapore, five in Penang and four
in Perak — were published, mostly by Jawi Peranakan writing as Malays
and identifying themselves with Malay interests (Khoo 2009, p. 115).
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In 1876 Mohamed Said Mohiddin of the Jawi Peranakan Company
edited the first Malay newspaper titled The Jawi Peranakan. Published in
Singapore and covering the Straits Settlements, the Malay States and the
region (National Archives, Malaysia 2012), it appealed to a broad readership
including Arabs, Peranakan Chinese, Indians and Malays. The weekly
appeared every Monday, carrying general news, government notices, an
editorial, syair (poetry) and advertisements (Sulaiman 2008). It remained
the most successful Malay newspaper until the Second World War,
particularly among the educated, and sparked off a host of other Malay
publications. In the same year (1876) Mohiddin also pioneered the first
Tamil newspaper in the Straits titled Tankainecan, illustrating “the extent to
which the hybrid Tamil Muslim community stood quite naturally astride
the Tamil and Muslim cultural worlds” (Amrith 2009, p. 557).
Penang’s first Tamil newspaper Vittiya Vicarini (1883) relocated to
Nagore with its editor, the Tamil poet Ghulam Kadir Navalar, exemplifying
the circulation of the people and ideas across the Bay of Bengal in the
nineteenth century (Amrith 2009, p. 557). Another Tamil newspaper, Singai
Varthamani, a weekly, was published and edited in Singapore in 1875 by
a Tamil Muslim, Magudum Sayabu, who also published Thangai Nesan in
1878 and Singai Nesan in 1887 (Interview, Fidha Ulla, 17 June 2008).
(c) Trade and Entrepreneurship: A Pivotal Role
Despite their relatively small numbers, in pre-colonial times Indian Muslim
traders played a pivotal role in plugging the Peninsula into global trade
networks, subsequently surviving three imperial powers — the Portuguese,
Dutch and British. After 1750 they were sidelined by European control of
Tamil ports, English expansion into the China trade and Arab re-entry
into the Straits of Malacca trade routes. When the Dutch prevented them
from trading in Malacca after the early eighteenth century, many Indian
Muslims relocated to Kedah (Khoo 2009, p. 99), and later Penang.
With the advent of colonialism Indian Muslim traders lost their
monopoly of the Indian Malayan trade but played a supporting role to
the British and Chinese. For example the Merican, Rawther and Lebai
clans harnessed their centuries-old trading experience to find niches in
varied businesses such as supplying provisions, labour, passengers, crew
and packing material to British ships in the main ports of Penang, Port
Swettenham (now known as Port Klang) and Singapore. Over the years,
containerization wiped out much of this trade, but some trading families
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switched to related businesses such as freight forwarding (Shanker 2001,
p. 27).
Over the span of the twentieth century Indian Muslim traders have
remained active in shipping and import-export, and as jewellers, moneychangers, bakers, pharmacists and petty traders. However various factors
have reduced their influence. Growing numbers had to face competition
from generally better-organized Chinese firms, State-backed Malay-run
companies (Shankar 2001, pp. 16–17, pp. 27–28) and multinationals. In
addition some successful early traders bought property and retired to
their home districts, especially where the land was fertile. In contrast
the poorer Kadayanallur immigrants established deep roots in Malaysia,
partly because they had full family formations here, but also because the
environments in their home districts in India were too harsh for survival
(Mydin Sultan, Interview, 17 June 2008). Though Indian Muslims still have
a business presence, the gaps left by these traders were quickly filled by
other firms such as Poh Kong Jewellers, Gardenia Bakery and Guardian
Pharmacy. Among the older Indian Muslim trading clans, some family-run
businesses have managed to modernize and expand locally and overseas.
Examples include Barkarth Store, Habib Jewels and Mydin, a large retailer
(see Appendix 1.3 for a description of some companies).
Influences on Popular Malaysian Culture
(a) Spicing up Malaysian food
It is well known that the infusion of spices and curries in many Malay
dishes reflect Indian influences. But what is often taken for granted is
the Indian Muslim impact on popular culture manifested in cuisine such
as roti canai, teh tarik, nasi kandar, pasembur and mamak mee. These have
virtually become “national” food items incorporating Malay, Chinese and
Indian elements enjoyed by all ethnic and religious groups. As one Indian
Muslim hawker on Penang’s Chulia Street puts it, “Most Malaysians can
eat our food — Malays know it’s halal, Chinese love our curry, and Indians
enjoy it, though they avoid beef” (Hawker, Interviews, Chulia Street,
7–8 April 2008).
In addition to hawkers, there are an estimated 8,000 Indian Muslim
restaurants catering to both Muslim and non-Muslim Malaysians. Located
at strategic locations in all cities and towns, they provide affordable food
in a casual ambiance. No other eateries today have as much cultural
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significance in Malaysia; indeed for Malaysians, the local “Mamak shop”
or kedai Mamak is as ubiquitous a gathering place as the Turkish teahouse
for the Turks or the English pub for the British. Unfortunately not many
Malaysians are aware of the origins of these food items.
Roti canai is a pan-fried flatbread served with curry or dhal. A version
of north India’s ubiquitous paratha, it is identical to the Singapore roti prata
and a close descendant of Kerala’s porotta. The term roti means bread in
Hindi, Urdu and Malay, and the word canai is believed to be linked to
either Chennai in India or to north Indian channa — boiled chickpeas
in spicy gravy, with which it was traditionally served. In Malaysia and
Singapore, roti canai is often taken for breakfast or supper, washed down
with teh tarik (“Mellow Yellow Canai” n.d. and Wikipedia 2007).
Teh tarik, literally meaning “pulled tea”, is a well-loved drink amongst
Malaysians. Sweetened condensed milk is used and the tea is poured from
a mug into a glass repetitively. The higher the “pull” the thicker the froth.
The pouring also cools the tea (Wikipedia 2009).
Nasi kandar is a popular northern Malaysian dish originating from
Penang. A meal of steamed rice served with a variety of curries and
side dishes, it can be eaten any time of the day. The term nasi kandar
originated when nasi (rice) hawkers or vendors would kandar (balance)
a pole on the shoulder with two huge containers kept in rattan baskets.
The name has remained and today the sign nasi kandar is seen on many
Mamak restaurants and stalls. The rice is accompanied by side dishes
such as fried chicken, curried spleen, cubed beef, fish roe, fried prawns
or fried squid. Vegetables are usually brinjal (aubergine), okra (ladies’
fingers), or bitter gourd. A mixture of curry sauces is poured on the rice.
This is called banjir (flooding) and imparts a diverse taste to the rice.
Traditionally, nasi kandar is served with its side dishes on a single plate.
It is said that the practice evolved when relatives carried food baskets for
stevedores at Penang Port. Due to requests for supplies from other workers
and the Aurvedic practice of food combination, only certain curries and
spices could be mixed with rice at any one time. Cooks therefore carried
a variety of dishes and curries, and this eventually evolved into nasi
kandar. However today the Aurvedic practice of food combination is
not observed and curries are mixed at random (Interview, A.V.M. Haja,
17 June 2008; Wikipedia n.d.).
Nasi kandar appeals to all ethnic groups. I once had nasi kandar for
lunch at a spotlessly clean lean-to shed in a side lane next to a Chinese
electrical shop in Datuk Keramat Road, Penang. The stall was run by two
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“Mamak” and Malaysian
19
Indian Muslim men, one older and one younger, who were supervised
by an older woman in a sari (likely newly arrived from India). The food
was tasty and the clientele was multi-ethnic. In the half hour I was there,
the customers included a middle-aged Malay man in a long-sleeved batik
from a government department nearby, a Chinese lady who arrived on a
motorbike, and a well-dressed young Indian Muslim man who worked in
the hotel industry. As I left, a young Indian Muslim girl (an office worker)
dressed in a silk baju kurung ordered a take-away “Milo Ice”. She spoke
in Malay (Fieldwork, Penang, June 2008).
Pasembur is the Malaysian Indian Muslim version of the IndonesianMalay rojak or salad. Ingredients include shredded cucumber, turnip,
potatoes, bean curd, bean sprouts, prawn fritters, spicy fried crab and fried
squid. It is served with sweet and spicy nutty sauce. The term pasembur
is unique to northern Peninsular Malaysia. It is especially associated with
Penang, where the best pasembur is said to be that sold along Gurney
Drive. In other parts of Malaysia, the term rojak Mamak is commonly used
(Wikipedia n.d.).
Mamak mee, referred to as Kelinga mee in the north by Penang Hokkiens,
is very popular and one of many fine examples of cross-cultural culinary
exchange over two centuries of Tamil Muslim and Chinese social interaction.
It is generally believed to be a hybrid of Chinese-style friend noodles and
pasembur. Both have common ingredients like cucur (fritters), tau kwa (fried
bean curd), squid and a potato-based tamarind-flavoured gravy. There
are two versions — mee goreng (fried noodles) and mee rebus (blanched
noodles). Mee goreng is fried with all its ingredients, including chopped
cabbage, onion flakes, sliced chillies and lime. Mee rebus is blanched with
bean sprouts, and then served with other ingredients and a generous
helping of gravy. Fried or boiled eggs and chilli are optional for both
dishes (“Indian Mee” n.d.).
(b) Language: Enriching Bahasa Malaysia
Indian Muslims have also played an important role in the development of
language in the region. The Tamil Muslims were believed to be instrumental
in the development of the Jawi script in the Nusantara due to their role as
religious scholars and court scribes at a time when literacy was a specialized
skill (Van Ronkel 1922, pp. 30–31 in Khoo 2009, p. 100).
Due to centuries of social interaction between the Indian Muslim and
Malay communities, the Malay language has been enriched by Tamil and
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Malayalam words (Wake 1890, pp. 81–87). Northern Malay in particular is
strongly influenced by Tamil accent and words. The Penang Malay dialect
has also borrowed from Sanskrit, Tamil, Hindustani and Urdu, in addition
to Persian and Arab (Khoo 2001b).
Malay was the lingua franca linking Penang’s disparate Indian
immigrant groups, including Indian Muslims. However within each group
they spoke Tamil and — depending on their descent — Urdu, Benggali or
Hindustani. Like Malays who still resort to regional dialects, some Indian
Muslims, particularly the Jawi Peranakan, prefer their Penang sub-dialect
called “Loghat Tanjong” for inter-group communications, but use standard
Bahasa Malaysia on professional and formal occasions (Halimah and
Zainab 2004, pp. 127–30).
In recent years there has been greater use of Bahasa Malaysia among
Indian Muslims due to inter-marriage to Malays and the Malay medium
of education. “Many Indian Muslims also grew up in Malay kampungs,
so the Bahasa Malaysia taught in school was reinforced by socialization
with Malay neighbours,’’ explains Fatimah Hassan an Indian Muslim who
works as a researcher at the State-run Socio-Economic Research Institute,
(Penang Institute) (Interview, 2 June 2008).11 Many Indian Muslims see little
economic value in Tamil compared to Bahasa Malaysia and English, while
others fear that being Tamil means being less Muslim, she says. “What
some don’t realize is that Tamil is a culture and language, not a religion,’’
she adds (Interview, Fatimah Hassan, 2 June 2008).
Most Indian Muslim youth today do not speak Tamil, and it is mainly
the older generation which retains the language. “Things have changed
so much that there are now requests for Bahasa Malaysia and English
rather than Tamil sermons in Indian Muslim mosques,” says A.V.M.
Haja, a respected lawyer-businessman who is president of the largely
Tamil-speaking Masjid India Mosque (1863),12 the oldest mosque in Kuala
Lumpur (Interview, 17 June 2008).
(c) Malaysian Theatre and Music: The Indian Link
The Indian Muslim impact is far stronger in Malaysian theatre and music
than is realized. It can be seen in Boria and Bangsawan theatre, both of
which developed indigenously in Penang and spread to the Peninsular
Malaysia, says Professor Dr Ghulam-Sarwar, a performing arts specialist
at the University of Malaya. Boria, connected with the story of Saiyidina
Ali, Islam’s fourth Caliph, reached Penang via the Sepoy13 Regiment
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21
which accompanied the British. Over the years it evolved to suit the local
situation. “Today, shorn of its religious qualities and totally transformed
in style and function, Boria has become a form of secular song and dance
genre incorporating in its lyrics praises for dignitaries,” he notes (Interview,
21 April 2008).
Bangsawan, the first style of urban theatre in the Peninsula, has an
even more amazing evolution from Muslim India. Created in the palace
of the Nawab of Oudh, it reached Bombay under the patronage of Parsee
merchants and became known as Parsee Theatre. Performers visited Penang
in the 1880s to entertain the Sepoys and merchants, and “the Penang
merchants liked it so much that they developed their own troupes and the
genre eventually acquired the name Bangsawan,” he explains. Originally
inspired by European Renaissance theatre, Parsee — later Bangsawan —
theatre adopted Western theatre techniques such as painted backdrops,
wings and borders and improvised acting. Today Bangsawan has a repertoire
that includes Indonesian, Thai and Chinese plays and multi-ethnic casts,
crew, owners and managers, and has evolved into the “national” theatre
of Malaysia.
Bangsawan has impacted Malaysian music tastes too. Hindustani
music, first popularized in Penang by Parsee theatre, has continued to
fascinate Malay, Chinese and Indian audiences in the Peninsula, thanks
to the legendary P. Ramlee (1929–73). An actor, producer, director and
singer, the late P. Ramlee was inspired by Indian, including Parsee themes.
Bangsawan theatre companies are also responsible for the influence of
Carnatic and Hindustani styles seen in the use of the flute and tabla in
the musical repertoire of top local artistes. Another Indian influence is
the Qawwali singing style which has evolved into various zikir styles,
including the Kelantanese Dikir Barat. Like Boria, this has transformed
into non-religious entertainment and become popularized in Malaysia
and Singapore (Interview, Ghulam-Sarwar, 21 April 2008).
STATE-DEFINED CATEGORIES:
DIVISIONS AND DILEMMAS
Colonial and Post-colonial Categories
Like other sojourners and settlers from the Malay Archipelago, the Middle
East and China, there was a rich diversity among the Indian immigrants
who landed on the Peninsula’s shores. This diversity appears to have been
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recognized, experienced and enjoyed by the communities as evidenced by
varied sub-ethnic organizations, places of worship and cuisine. This was
particularly so in Penang, where other than Tamils, there was a sprinkling of
Muslims of Malabari, Punjabi, Pathan, Sindhi, Gujarati and Bengali origins.
In addition the 1881 Census recognized the Jawi Peranakan (Nagata 2006,
p. 517). However, for administrative convenience and control, the British
eventually compressed the highly heterogeneous Indian communities —
like the once disparate Malay and Chinese groups — into monolithic,
homogenous categories.
Today there are three groups with Indian Muslim lineage categorized
by the State according to their ethnic and nationality status. They
comprise “Malay Muslim” citizens who make up the majority, in addition
to “Indian Muslim” permanent residents (PRs) and “Indian Muslim”
citizens (Shanker 2001; Mohamed Iqbal, Interview, 17 June 2008). In terms
of their State-recognized identity, those in the last two groups are in an
anomalous State and social position because they share the religion of
the Malay-majority but the “race” of the Indian minority. Though not
all Indian Muslims seek to change their ethnic status, some who have
applied claim they have been rejected by the State despite meeting the
Constitutional definition of “Malay”.
Malay Muslim Citizens: Acculturated and Assimilated
The cultural-based legal definition of “Malay” in the Federal Constitution
has since 1957 gradually allowed most Indian Muslims to enter the
fold of the Malay with ease. The majority of Indian Muslims today are
“Malay Muslim” citizens officially recognized by the State as Malays
since they fit into the Constitutional definition of Malay by being Muslim,
speaking Malay and practising Malay customs. Some apply directly to the
Registration Department to change their own or their children’s ethnic
status to Malay to overcome their ambiguous identity and to gain from
opportunities offered by affirmative action policies related to the special
position of the Malays under the Constitution (Stark 2006, p. 387). Most
however, eventually become recognized as Malays through acculturation,
intermarriage and assimilation. Malay Muslim citizens are classified in
their state-issued identity card computer database as Muslim by religion,
and their official identity is most clearly evidenced by the Malay Muslim
patronymic “bin” and “binti” attached to their names.
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“Malay Muslim citizens” with Indian lineage include a minority
which is registered as Malay but remains culturally Indian Muslim. Most
comprise children of endogamous marriages whose Indian Muslim parents
have managed to register them as Malays. The researcher Fatimah Hassan
explains:
These younger Malaysian-born Indian Muslims ensure their children
are registered in their birth certificate and identity card (IC) as “Malay
Muslim” so that there is no problem from the start. The parents also make
sure their children have the Malay patronymic “bin” and “binti” and not
“anak” or “son/daughter of”, which is usually used in the ICs of Indians.
(Interview, 2 June 2008)
The majority have intermarried and assimilated with Malays over several
generations, and include descendants of Jawi Peranakan. Legally they
do not face any problem being categorized as Malays since they not
only fit into the constitution’s cultural definition of Malay, but have
Malay ancestry and therefore do not face any administrative problems
in registering their children as Malays. The only trace of their Indian
Muslim ancestry is sometimes noticeable in surnames like Mohideen,
Mydin or Merican.
The Jawi Peranakan are important in helping us understand the issue
of identity. Since most of the early Tamil migrants to Penang were single
males, many took Malay wives. Their offspring were known as Jawi
Peranakan. The word Jawi is a term of Arabic origin referring to Southeast
Asian Muslims, while Peranakan refers to those locally born but nonindigenous (Nagata 2006, pp. 519–20).14 Despite interethnic marriages in the
early years, the Jawi Peranakan remained a “separate and self-perpetuating
category” and a new hybrid ethnic group “exhibiting Indian and Malay
characteristics and yet belonging …to neither” (Nagata 2006, pp. 519–20).
To overcome their minority status and loss of urban land and trade to
Chinese they harnessed English education, moved into prestigious jobs
as journalists, teachers and civil servants, and took up leadership roles in
the Malay community. This helped them to identify with and be accepted
by the Malays (Fujimoto 1989, pp. 14–17).
From once derogatory terms used to refer to self-proclaimed “Malays”
of Indian ancestry, the terms Jawi Peranakan — and even Mamak — are
now acquiring positive connotations, especially among some Malay
elite. “Not all stereotypes about us are negative,” explains lawyer A.V.M.
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Haja. “Some Malays are proud to claim they have Mamak blood, in the
same way that they often like to be identified with Arabs. This is because
most Malays are civil servants while Indian Muslims — like Arabs — are
associated with merchants,” he says (Interview, 17 June 2008). A growing
number of the newly educated Malay middle class are today confident
enough to openly admit their Indian roots, especially if the State already
recognizes them as Malay Muslim citizens. Such self-descriptions were
uncommon in the past (Interviews, A.V.M Haja, 17 June 2008, and Puan
Merican, January 2010, Kuala Lumpur).15
Politically too it has now become acceptable for Malay elites
to highlight their Indian ancestry. The prime example of this is
Dr Mahathir Mohamad. Touching on his family background in his
memoirs he says: “My father was a Penang Malay. Almost all Malays of the
island of Penang have some Indian blood.” He explains: “Culturally and
linguistically, the Penang Malays are Malays. My father could not speak any
of the languages of India and knew none of his forebears or relatives there.
The connection was completely broken” (Mahathir Mohamad 2011, p. 14).
In the next chapter entitled “I am a Malay” he says, “I admit that
some Indian, or more accurately South Asian blood flows in my veins,
but from which part of the Indian subcontinent my ancestors came I do
not know.” Alluding to one possible reason he avoided talking about
his ethnic background during office, he laments the double ethnic
stereotyping he endured as Prime Minister; any “unpopular decision”
was attributed to him being Malay, but “good decisions, those that
brought progress and prosperity to the nation, it was always because
I had Indian blood.” Asserting that good leaders must challenge ethnic
stereotypes, he writes, “I wanted to prove otherwise: that Malays were
more than capable of thinking, progressing and leading” (Mahathir
Mohamed 2011, p. 24). He then explains that being Malay is a formal
legal construct unrelated to descent, and states his own position clearly
and forcefully:
My family and I have always fulfilled those formal criteria. But I am a
Malay not just on paper. I am also a Malay in sentiment and in spirit.
I identify completely with the Malays and their problems, their past and
their present, their achievements and failures. I do not do so sentimentally
and uncritically, but thoroughly and thoughtfully.
(A Doctor in the House: The Memoirs of
Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, 2011, pp. 25, 26).
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A 2004 book on the history, role, and assimilation of the Jawi Peranakan
written by two Malay academics identifies and speaks positively of
a number of prominent Malays with Jawi Peranakan roots, including
Dr Mahathir, who appears in a Hari Raya photo with one author (Halimah
and Zainab 2004). The book is published by a local university formerly
known as the Sultan Idris Teacher’s Training College, once a bastion of
Malay nationalism.
Najmudeen Kader, a respected middle-aged businessman who heads
the fifty-year-old Penang-based Muslim League, a powerful coalition of
Indian Muslim organizations, summarizes it thoughtfully: “The Malays
are a heterogeneous people who are made up of many sub-ethnic groups,
including Indian Muslims” (Interview, 31 May 2008).
Indian Muslim Permanent Residents:
Not Acculturated nor Assimilated
These are non-citizen Permanent Residents (PRs) classified in their identity
card records as Indians by race and Muslims by religion. They carry the
patronymic anak — meaning “son/daughter of” — commonly used for
Indians. The majority are older, male, Indian-born immigrants holding
Malaysian permanent residency and Indian citizenship, with an Indianborn wife and children in India. They make a living in Malaysia as petty
traders but maintain family, religious and — in the case of larger traders
— business links with India. Tamil is their main language at home and
among business colleagues, but they use bazaar Malay with customers and
in dealings with the State. It is not known exactly how large this group
is, but according to one grass-roots leader “there are thousands who are
born in India and cannot get Malaysian citizenship” (Interview, Ibrahim
Vengai, 16 June 2008).16
Not possessing Malaysian citizenship, voting rights or the ability for
family reunions, many commute between both countries, maintain their
Indian roots, and do not feel a complete sense of belonging to Malaysia
(Shanker 2001, p. 50). This group remains trapped in transnational loyalties.
They do not enjoy State recognition as Malays, and given their poverty
and absence of political voice, are often the subject of ethnic stereotypes
and jokes (Interview, Ibrahim Vengai, 16 June 2008).
They have not been helped by a once tough government stance on
citizenship. Referring to complaints that many were unsuccessful in
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citizenship applications despite applying numerous times, in 1995 the
then Deputy Home Minister Dato’ Megat Junid Megat Ayub stated that
sincerity will be judged by the number of times they reapply, and their
ability to speak and write Malay. Though some had lived in Malaysia for
several generations, he said this does not automatically qualify them as
citizens, especially if they spend periods in both countries and have their
family in India (New Straits Times, 20 February 1995).
Though some PRs have managed to obtain citizenship for their
Malaysian-born children, most are unable to switch their children’s official
ethnic identity to Malay because they are classified as being of “Indian
descent” (Keturunan India). Technically, the key device in achieving official
recognition as Malay is to apply to the Registration Department to drop
the patronymic anak or “son/daughter of”. The patronymic is a give-away
sign that they are of Indian origin and a sure way to be denied entry into
the fold of the Malay and their constitutionally bestowed special position.
However many applications in the past were rejected due to what appeared
to be ad-hoc administrative decisions by individual civil servants in
Registration Departments, where decisions varied widely from state to
state. Applications have reportedly been rejected for a range of reasons —
if parents are of “keturunan India”, the applicant’s Bahasa Malaysia is not
seen to be fluent enough, or even for wearing Indian rather than Malay
clothes (Nagata 2006, p. 527). Except for descent, the civil servants may be
technically correct in rejecting certain applications since speaking Malay
and following Malay customs are among the constitutional requirements
of being Malay.
Indian Muslim Citizens: Acculturated but not Assimilated
This group comprises mainly children of PRs who remain classified in their
identity cards as Indian. Despite being deeply acculturated to the Malay
way of life through interaction in common locales, schools and workplaces,
being Muslims, speaking Malay, and practising Malay customs, the State
does not accept them as Malays, and they still have to carry the Indian
patronymic anak in their identity cards. While some are content to remain
Indian Muslims, many are anxious for State recognition as Malays in order
to acquire a clearer cultural identity and better economic opportunities.
As full-fledged citizens who are denied official recognition as Malays, this
group is the most vocal about what they perceive as State discrimination.
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27
The problem is so persistent that there are pleas for them to be classified
as Malays before almost every national election.
In 1994, the Deputy Chairman of the Muslim League Council, Sheik
Alauddin, complained that hospitals and State Registration Departments
refused to allow Penang Indian Muslims to change their children’s names
from anak to bin and binti (Daud 1994). Just before the 2008 national elections,
Malaysian Indian Muslim Youth Movement President Mohamed Kader
Ali complained that despite conforming to the Constitutional definition
of Malay, some Indian Muslims have tried, unsuccessfully for fifty years,
to be reclassified as Malays. His son, Syed Osman Mohamed, 24, said:
We feel uncomfortable to be known as Indians because people automatically
think we are Hindus when we are actually Muslims. All our children do
not even know how to speak Tamil. They only converse in Malay, and
our wives wear baju kurung or kebaya nowadays, no more the sari.
(Expressindia, 3 March 2008).
THE INDIAN MUSLIM “IDENTITY CRISIS”
The Dilemma of Dual Identities
The majority of Malaysians of Indian Muslim lineage have inter-married,
fully assimilated into the Malay community, and are classified as Malay.
However a minority remains Indian Muslim, sharing the religion of the
Malay majority but the “race” of the Indian minority. Since they live in a
society organized along essentialized ethnic and religious lines, this creates
problems for some of them.
Firstly, they are accepted by the State as Muslims but not as Malays;
they remain categorized as Indians in a State where Malays are prioritized
in State affirmative action policies. This contributes to perceptions of State
discrimination, and what community leaders refer to as an “identity crisis”.
Secondly, their anomalous position sometimes results in social stereotyping
and social discrimination, partly because other Malaysians are not sure
where to “place” them, but also because Indian Muslims are often forced
to harness multiple identities in their quest for identity and opportunity.
Perceived State Discrimination: “Categorized as Indians”
The most affected are Indian Muslim citizens who cannot carry the
patronymic bin or binti in their names because their parents are considered
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Indians, not Malays. Despite being officially recognized as Muslims, they
are still regarded by the State (and society) as Indians with Malay names.
A.V.M. Haja, the lawyer who is Masjid India Mosque president, says this
situation has sparked an “identity crisis”, which he contends is “the single
biggest issue facing the community today”. He adds:
The Malays worry that we will take away their rights, but many Indian
Muslims want the “bin” and “binti” for cultural identity and educational
access for their children. Some parents complain their children are
ethnically ostracized in schools because of their names. Yet they cannot
change their children’s names. If some Indians from India have “bin”
and “binti” on their names and Malaysian Chinese converts are allowed
to do so, why not us? It’s not too much to ask.
(Interview, 17 June 2008).
Another community leader, Dr Mohamed Iqbal, says a perennial complaint
is the reported inability of some to qualify for places, scholarships and
loans reserved for Malays in tertiary institutions.17 According to him, some
cannot gain entry into government-run university matriculation courses
— which are seen as a passport into local universities — despite being
classified as Malays in their birth certificates and identity cards. “This
is because they fail the ethnicity test when application forms demand
information on their keturunan ibu-bapa (parent’s ancestry)” (Interview,
17 June 2008). The researcher and writer Dr Neil Khor (2009) has also
observed that “many Indian Muslims have been asked to produce their
parent’s birth certificates before they can qualify for places reserved for
the bumiputeras. When it is learnt that they have Indian parents, they fail
to obtain the desired scholarships.” The respected Indian Muslim radio
journalist and commentator Mydin Sultan claims that “Indian Muslims
do not enjoy preferential quotas allotted to Malays when they apply to
universities — they are categorized as Indians even though all their legal
documents classify them as Malays” (Interview, 17 June 2008).
Despite these allegations, there are many cases where Indian
Muslims have successfully obtained government loans, scholarships,
and sponsored places in local and foreign universities. In Sarawak, for
example, a sample survey of thirty Indian Muslims found that all those
below the age of thirty classified themselves as Malays in applications.
One respondent said:
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29
Only bumiputeras can enter UiTM (University Technology Mara), and more
easily (enter) other public universities compared to a non-bumiputera.
I applied and got accepted to do a course in Science. I applied as a
bumiputera — a Malay. So I’m bumiputera — a Malay because of my religion,
even though both my parents are Indian Muslims and not Malays. There
is no column for Indian Muslims in the application form.
(Survey respondent, quoted in Khemlani David
and Dealwis 2009, p. 43).
The most likely explanations for these discrepancies is that while declared
Federal Government policies are usually clear, actual decision-making at
State, institutional and organizational levels can be ad-hoc, non-transparent
and fluid, leading to unequal outcomes and perceptions of discrimination.
Whether or not such discrimination exists is a moot point — the fact remains
that powerful community leaders perceive, rightly or wrongly, that it does.
Social Discrimination: Negative Stereotyping
In addition to perceived State discrimination, the Indian Muslim community
is often at the receiving end of negative stereotypes commonly expressed in
private conversations and the Internet. For example, a letter written to the
popular online news media Malaysiakini complained that Indian Muslims
were often called “Mamak”, associated with roti canai and teh tarik sellers,
and treated derogatorily. The writer asked why “people who are loyal to
this country are treated like foreigners despite having been here all their
lives?” (GM 2001). Other comments came from an Indian Muslim who
complained of bullying at religious classes, (Bashah 2009) and a writer
who claimed that “Tamil-speaking Indian Muslims have been suffering
in silence for the last 50 years” (Marginalised TMIM 2008).
The term “Mamak” is thought to have originated from “Mama”, a
respectful Tamil term for an older man. However when used in the case
of Indian Muslims it can also have a neutral or negative connotation,
depending on the context. “You’re not Malay, you’re Mamak,” is a common
taunt faced by Indian Muslims, especially in rural schools.18 Translated
into local parlance as “U bukan Melayu, U Mamak,” it is often employed
by a minority of rural folk who are less exposed to urban-based Indian
Muslims, and who assume that just as all Malays are Muslims, all Indians
are Hindus. An Indian Muslim is, in their minds, a social anomaly. In
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30
addition to Mamak, the term Darah Keturunan Kling (having Indian blood),
is sometimes used to set them apart from Malays and Indians. The point
is that these stereotypes simplify and vilify a complex community and
deny and decry their vast contributions to Malaysian society.
OVERCOMING THE “IDENTITY CRISIS”:
ETHNIC, POLITICAL AND SOCIAL ROUTES
The Indian Muslim community has over time adopted a variety of
individual and collective ethnic, political and social routes to overcome
their perceived social and economic marginalization.
Ethnic Routes: Living With Multiple Identities
Most Indian Muslims prefer State-recognition as Malays because compared
to other ethnic minorities, the political and economic stakes are highest for
them — either they gain State recognition as Malays, belong to the politically
dominant majority and enjoy a special position under the Constitution, or
remain classified as Indians, a political minority. One scholar has noted
that this aspiration is strong among both the working and business classes
(Stark 2006, p. 387), but fieldwork for this book indicates that the desire
for a State-recognized Malay identity is especially prevalent among the
growing middle class, many of whom compete with the middle class
from other ethnic groups — particularly Malays — for civil service jobs,
government contracts, and university places and scholarships.
For “Indian Muslim” Permanent Residents and citizens, coping with
the identity crisis can involve dual negotiations, one at the State level and
the other at a social level. At State level, it involves registering themselves
or their children as Malays and changing their ethnic status in their identity
cards to Malay. However, at a social level they may present themselves as
Malays or Indians without contradiction, as the situation demands. For
instance one cohort of older “Indian Muslims” citizens are Tamil-educated
and Tamil-speaking and have endogamous marriages. But since they
cannot gain entry into the category of Malay, they present themselves as
Tamil-Muslim culturally but “Malay” politically, in relation to the State.
“I am a Tamil, Indian, Muslim,” one trader says, “but when I deal with
government departments I have to tell them I’m Malay. It’s a question of
survival.” (Interview, Anonymous Respondent, Penang, June 2008).
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31
In this context some comments by ex-premier Dr Mahathir Mohamad
on the community are interesting. During the Kadayanallur Muslim
Association’s (KMA) sixty-fourth anniversary dinner in Penang in 2009,
he was quoted by the national news agency Bernama as saying:
The country is very liberal and I think they (Indian Muslims) will be
accepted by all if they can pick either to become a Muslim or Indian. The
Federal Constitution also define(s) a Muslim very clearly. If they want
to become a Muslim then just follow the Constitution. The problem of
Indian Muslims will be resolved if they can decide and choose to become
either a Muslim or an Indian.
(Bernama, 24 December 2009).
Since the group he was addressing was already Muslim, perhaps he was
politely telling them that they should choose to be either Malay (“Muslim”)
or Indian, and that there are no two ways about it. Such a viewpoint fits
clearly into his credentials as a Malay nationalist. Mahathir also said at the
same gathering that Indian Muslims “must put aside their origin country
and call themselves Malaysians for 1Malaysia to be successful” (Bernama
2009). His advice about being Malaysian also fits into his credentials as a
leader who enunciated “Vision 2020” — the concept of a fully developed
nation — and the idea of a “Bangsa Malaysia”, or Malaysian nationality.
But Mahathir’s comments raise two questions. Firstly, can Indian
Muslims, or for that matter any other ethnic group, easily identify
themselves as Malaysians if racial ideology, ethnic politics and State
policy prioritize ethnicity? Secondly, why is it not possible to be Muslim
and remain Indian, that is, Indian Muslim? Even a third permutation, the
hybrid Jawi Peranakan, is possible. In other words, multiple identities are
possible, without in any way detracting from being Malaysian.
Political Routes: Coalescing Fluid Identities
This involves political mobilization to gain opportunities for the Indian
Muslim community. Like many other ethnic minorities, the community
has tilted towards the political establishment for support. The Muslim
League was an early political party affiliated to the United Malays National
Organization (UMNO), and Indian Muslims first joined UMNO via the
Muslim League in 1957. In its early days the Muslim League successfully
fielded, among others, Mr S.M. Idris, a prominent businessman, who won
the local council elections. In 1974 the Muslim League became a social body.
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32
Subsequently a political party, the Indian Muslim based Kongres India
Muslim Malaysia (KIMMA, or Malaysian Indian Muslim Congress), was
formed in 1979. It teamed up with the UMNO breakaway party Semangat
46 and became part of an opposition coalition called Gagasan Rakyat, which
lost badly in the 1988 general elections. Since then it sought to join the
ruling coalition, and after six unsuccessful attempts, was finally accepted
as an associate member of UMNO, with observer status in 2010 (The Star,
Friday, 28 August 2010). Its president was also appointed a senator in July
2011, giving the community a direct line to the government and a greater
say in public affairs.
Winning representation in government was difficult for the community
partly because its fluid identities led to suspicion and confusion. Political
analyst Hanapi Dollah comments:
……(the) identity of the Indian Muslims changes from Indian Muslims
to Indian when they join MIC (Malaysian Indian Congress) and becomes
Indian Muslim again when they form KIMMA and finally changes further
to Malay when they join UMNO.
(Hanapi Dollah, quoted in Seeni Naina Mohamed, 2001).
At the same time, there has been pressure from community leaders to move
toward a Malay identity. In 1983, for example, Malaysian Indian Muslim
Association (Permim) President Mohamed Ismail Sharif told members
they had not benefited from their identity, and urged them to renounce
their Indian identity and ally themselves with the majority Malay Muslims
(Shanker 2001, p. 88).
Social Routes: Mobility and Marriage
Alternatively, or in conjunction with ethnic and political routes, individuals
and families have improved their socio-economic status through
educational, occupational and geographical mobility. Such mobility often
involves moving out of their own ethnic spaces, leading to increased
interaction, intermarriage and eventually assimilation into the majorityMalay community.
According to community leaders, increasing numbers of Indian Muslims
are marrying Malays. Some segments of the Indian Muslim working class
still tend to be endogamous but marriage to Malays is increasing among this
group due to common schooling, shared neighbourhoods and workplaces,
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33
socialization outside the Indian Muslim community, and the passing on
of patriarchs who would have otherwise frowned upon mixed marriages
(Interview, Fatimah Hassan, 2 June 2008). Due to the country’s rapid
growth, thousands of educated children and grandchildren of once poor
immigrants today work in the modern manufacturing and service sectors,
while graduates work in the professions and the civil service, where they
interact with and meet Malays.
Marriage to Malays is most common among middle-class Indian
Muslim males whose parents are merchants, professionals or civil servants
(Interviews, Mydin Sultan, 17 June, and Ibrahim Vengai, 16 June 2008).
Couples usually meet in multi-ethnic educational and work environments
locally and overseas. According to A.V.M. Haja this trend is due to the large
number of Malay female graduates, a perception that Indian Muslim men
are family-oriented, and the lack of emphasis on higher education for Indian
Muslim girls in the past. “Indian Muslim parents are today more aware of
the need to educate girls in order to make them financially independent
and increase their choice of marriage partners,” he adds (Interview,
17 June 2008). An enterprising retired Indian Muslim academic has also
alleviated the problem through a successful free Internet matchmaking
service (MalaysianMuslimMatrimonial.com).
Intermarriage to Malays is likely to lead to more and more Indian
Muslims identifying themselves with the Malay community. Survey
research among Indian Muslims in Sarawak indicates that when marriages
are exogamous (that is, one parent is Malay), the children identify themselves
with the dominant Malay community, but when it is endogamous (that
is, both parents are Indian), the children tend to identify themselves as
Indian (David and Dealwis 2009, pp. 38–39).
CONCLUSION: THE INDIAN MUSLIM QUEST
FOR IDENTITY
The Indian Muslim impact on Malaysian life is the most influential
compared to other ethnic minorities. This is due to their long history of
contact with the region, their strong trade and political links, and their
common religion with Malays. Even today their influence on religion,
language, politics, literature, theatre, music, built heritage and cuisine
remains strong and indelible. However these contributions have been
largely overlooked as the role and influence of the community diminished
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over time, partly because many of them intermarried and assimilated into
the heterogeneous Malay community.
While the majority are now clearly identified by the State as “Malay
Muslim citizens”, a minority — comprising “Indian Muslim” Permanent
Residents and citizens — are still recognized as Indians rather than as
Malays. Despite meeting the constitutional definition of Malay — being
Muslim, speaking Malay and practising Malay customs — they are
unable to change their official ethnic identity to Malay. While some are
content to remain “Indian Muslims”, the majority wish to be recognized
as Malays to avoid social discrimination and to access State opportunities
given to Malays.
Many younger Indian Muslims are able to improve their social status
through educational, occupational and geographical mobility. In addition,
those from the middle classes in particular have opportunities to interact,
inter-marry and be assimilated into the Malay community. However a
working class segment with PR status and their children remain trapped
in dual identities; being neither “Malay” nor “Indian” they perceive both
social and State discrimination.
Contrary to the stereotype of the prosperous Indian Muslim merchant,
the majority of Indian Muslims remain wage earners. As with other
communities in Malaysia, higher national economic growth rates have
improved living standards for all, but it has also increased intra-ethnic
wealth and income gaps. “Many people see a few rich Indian Muslim
merchants and conclude that most of us are rich,” notes Ibrahim Vengai,
a community leader and businessman from the northern town of Teluk
Intan. “They don’t realize that only a few are businessmen — the rest
are all wage earners” (Interview, 16 June 2008). Many second and thirdgeneration Kadayanallur immigrants still work long hours as wage-earners
or petty traders, often selling food, stationery and bread from lean-to
sheds in narrow lanes and alcoves (Shanker 2001) in towns throughout
the Peninsula.
While decades of State-led affirmative action have reduced absolute
poverty and produced a larger middle class, grass-roots community
leaders say that many Indian Muslim urban workers continue to struggle
to make a comfortable living, competing for jobs and better wages with
thousands of low-cost foreign workers from Indonesia, Burma, and the
Indian sub-continent. In addition, in George Town and other urban areas
in the Peninsula, the repeal of the Rent Control Act in 2000 hit many poor
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35
Indian Muslims who for generations saved on rent and transport by living
and working in pre-war shophouses.
Thus for the ordinary Indian Muslim worker today the dilemma of
economic marginalization is conflated with that of dual ethnic identities
and a perception of State and social discrimination. It is not surprising
therefore that — like most ethnic minorities discussed in this book — some
Indian Muslims see the acquisition of a State-recognized Malay-bumiputera
identity, rather than a non-ethnic based economic and social policy, as
the most effective means to improve their socio-economic position and
social integration.
This perceived discrimination among segments of the Indian Muslim
community is ironic given their deep-rooted contributions to Malaysian
society. Indian Muslims, like all other ethnic minorities, should be
encouraged not just to maintain but also celebrate their heritage and identity
in the context of their historical and current role in nation-building. This
can happen if they are accepted as part and parcel of a heterogeneous
Malay community within a diverse multi-ethnic society. They can be
Muslim, Indian, Jawi Peranakan, and yet remain Malaysian — without
any contradiction — if Malaysia evolves from its ethnic-based political
system to one where civic citizenship and economic needs take precedence
over ethnicity.
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36
APPENDIX 1.1
MOHIDEEN, A KADAYANALLUR TRADER*
Haja Mohideen has been making and selling songkok, the local Islamic headgear,
for half a century. His shop sits in an alcove in the Nagore Shrine in Chulia Street.
The shop, established by his father, a Kadayanallur immigrant, has been located
here for almost a century. Mohideen, 58, wears a thin white singlet and thick
spectacles, perhaps a result of years of intricate sewing. He is very busy using a
small wooden hammer to staple the velvet of some headgear. The tiny shop is
well equipped, with two worn out but functioning Singer sewing machines, one
elongated to serve as a customer counter. A portable radio blaring Tamil music
is his constant companion, while a suspended neon bulb, a Tamil calendar and
two thread spittoons — one gold and one blue — complete his work ensemble.
A few minutes later, his grandniece arrives with her mother. He proudly
introduces the girl, Sheerin, as “a doctor, just graduated from Dublin, just started
working at the General Hospital.” Both the sari-clad mother and daughter, who
wears a Malay-style baju kurung and headscarf, look happy. Mohideen suddenly
excuses himself and disappears down the backlane. After some small talk I venture
to ask the doctor what ethnic group she identifies herself with: “Indian Muslim,”
she replies quickly. Ali, a friend of Mohideen who is at the shop, volunteers: “Both
her mother and father are Indian Muslims and she has been brought up the Indian
Muslim way, so she sees herself as one!”
Mohideen reappears with fifty food packets, and explains that they are to
be distributed to the poor inside the nearby shrine as a thanksgiving offering for
Sheerin’s new job. He offers me a packet, saying, “just try, and tell me how.” The
rice came with mild chicken curry and meat, brinjal, and chunks of soft potato,
and was delicious!
He is finally relaxed enough to talk. He recalls working by day and studying
by night for the first four years of secondary school. However he could not continue
his education as his father was unable to pay the school fees and needed his help in
the shop. Their main clients were Indian Muslim immigrants who often took a few
songkoks home as gifts. The songkok (headgear) worn by Muslim men for religious
and official ceremonies, is believed to have originated from Achehnese migrants.
Mohideen is fifty-eight but looks much older. “When my kids were small
I used to work 14–15 hours a day, often from morning till midnight. We lived
in a rented room nearby. Now it’s okay. My son is an engineer with Intel, my
daughter is a teacher. Most of our clients were local Indian Muslims who lived
in the city. There were more when Penang was a free port and before rent control
was abolished in 2000. There was a thriving community in the city centre then,
which was alive till late every night.”
*This profile is based on several interviews in Penang in April 2008.
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APPENDIX 1.2
FAZAL MOHD BROS:
PROVIDING FOR THE PILGRIM’S PASSAGE*
While Tamil Muslims from the south form the majority of Indian Muslims in
Penang, many other Indians, including those from the north, have also contributed
to its history, including its Islamic legacy. Across the road from the Nagore Shrine
on Chulia Street are a row of ordinary looking textile shops. But one shop, Fazal
Mohd Bros, is special. It serves a select clientele — Muslim pilgrims embarking
on the haj. The items in this shop were once available only in the Port of Aden
in Yemen, and the shop today symbolizes the historical role of Penang as a key
location for Muslims in the region heading to Mecca to perform the haj. (From the
nineteenth century to the 1970s Penang Port was a transit point for haj pilgrims
from Southeast Asia, particularly the Peninsula, northern Sumatra and South
Thailand (Abdur-Razzaq and Khoo 2003).)
The original founder of the shop migrated to Malaya in 1926 from Punjab
in what was then India. He settled in Sungai Bayor, a one-street town in the
Selama District of Perak where some relatives lived, and traded in textiles, clocks,
bicycles, and prayer mats. In 1939 he went back to get married and returned
with his wife, two uncles, and their families. Four years later, the three families
moved to Taiping, the administrative capital of the Federated Malay States. In
1952 one uncle moved to Chulia Street to this shop, which was rented from a
Chettiar (money-lender) for $175 a month. After 1957, when Taiping ceased to be
the administrative and military centre, business became slack so all the families
moved in stages to Penang.
In the 1960s the shop began specializing in pilgrimage items. Apart from
Singapore, Penang was the only other place in the region where ships embarked
on the journey to the Holy Land, and pilgrims needed to have certain items for the
journey. Though pilgrims from the region now fly directly to the Holy Land, the
State-run Pilgrims Board has enabled more Muslims to make the pilgrimage. This
has aided the family business. Flights for the haj depart from Penang (in addition
to Kuala Lumpur and Johor Bahru), and till this day pilgrims from nearby Kedah,
Perak and Perlis purchase their items from the shop before leaving.
The shop sells at least twenty-five items related to the pilgrimage, in addition
to standard textile items. The items range from two-piece white towel-robes for
men and head-dresses and clothes for women to lip balm, pocket-sized Qurans,
perfumes and prayer books.
* Source: Author’s Fieldwork, 2008–09.
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APPENDIX 1.3
SHOPS TO SUPERSTORES:
BARKATH, HABIB AND MYDIN
Kumpulan Barkath’s history began in 1945 when an entrepreneur, the late Haji
Abu Backer bin Mohd Hussain, founded a sundry shop called Barkath Stores at
Union Street, Penang. The small family shop turned into a manufacturing venture
with the local production of British “Hacks” sweets, other confectioneries, and
frozen foods. Today, Barkath stores operates as part of Kumpulan Barkath, a group
of twenty-two companies based in Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, India and the
United Kingdom involved in manufacturing, import-export, distribution, property
development, investment and communications (Kumpulan Barkath n.d.).
Habib Jewels began when Habib Mohamed Abdul Latif started his business
in Penang in 1958. Today it has become a household name and operates a chain
of jewellery outlets across the country. Habib’s designs are a fusion of Malay,
Chinese and Indian elements, and appeal to a wide cross-section of Malaysians
(iGeorge Town Penang n.d).
Mydin Mohamed Holdings, a major retailer and wholesaler, had its humble
beginnings in 1957 when its founder Mydin Mohamed set up shop in Kota Bahru,
Kelantan, catering to the Indian Muslim community. Following his success there, he
opened another branch in the heart of Kuala Lumpur in the Indian Muslim Masjid
Jamek area. Today Mydin serves all ethnic communities and has 4,000 employees
across twenty-eight branches nationwide (Allied Telesis 2007).
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APPENDIX 1.4
LIST OF INTERVIEWS/FIELD VISITS
1. “Akbar” (religious official, Kapitan Keling Mosque), interview by the author,
5 April 2008.
2. Anwar Fazal (former UN official), interviews by the author, April and June
2008.
3. Asraf Fazal (proprietor of Fazal Bros), interview by the author, 7 April
2008.
4. A.V.M. Haja (lawyer, entrepreneur, and president of Masjid India Mosque),
interview by the author at Bilal Restaurant, Kuala Lumpur 17 June 2008.
5. Dato’ Dr Mohamed Iqbal (group executive director for FARLIM Group),
interview by the author in Bandar Sri Subang, Kuala Lumpur (17 June
2008).
6. Fatimah Hassan (senior programme coordinator for Socio-economic and
Environment Research Institute), interview by the author 2 June 2008.
7. Fidha Ulla (journalist for Nambikai Magazine, Kuala Lumpur), interview by
the author, 17 June 2008.
8. Haja Mohideen (petty trader) interview by the author on Chulia Street,
7–8 April 2008.
9. Himanshu Bhatt (bureau chief of The Sun), interview by the author, 9 April
2008 and 1 June 2008.
10. Ibrahim Vengai (social worker and businessman from Teluk Intan), interview
by the author in Kuala Lumpur, 16 June 2008.
11. Meera Nagore (book trader and local historian), interviews by the author,
April and June 2008.
12. Mydin Sultan (radio journalist and commentator for RTM), interview by the
author at Nambikai magazine office, Kuala Lumpur, 17 June 2008.
13. Najmudeen Kader (President of the Muslim League), interview by the author,
31 May 2008.
14. S.M. Mohamed Idris (businessman, President of Consumer’s Association of
Penang and former President of Penang Lighter Owners Association), interview
by the author, 30 May 2008.
15. Random interviews with university and school students by the author, in
Penang (June 2008) and Kuala Lumpur (February 2010).
16. Yousof Ghulam-Sarwar, Professor, University of Malaya, interview by the
author, 21 April 2008.
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Notes
1. Now known as Jalan Masjid Kapitan Keling.
2. A pseudonym.
3. This estimate was provided by community leader Ibrahim Vengai (Interview,
16 June 2008) and confirmed by the Indian Muslim corporate and community
leader Dr Mohamed Iqbal (Interview, 25 June 2008).
4. There are other relics and ruins revealing the Hindu Pallava empire’s fourth
century contacts on the Penang mainland and its seventh century links in
Kedah and Perak. There is also evidence of eighth and ninth century Buddhist
Srivijayan influence in Kedah and Perak (Ghulam-Sarwar 2001).
5. Unless otherwise stated, details of the history of Indian immigration in Penang
are based on a series of interviews with the late Penang-based local historian
and book trader Meera Nagore in April and June 2008. Additional information
is from the historian Khoo Salma Nasution (2001a, b).
6. Meera claims this is the origin of the pejorative “Mamak Tongkang” sometimes
used on Indian Muslims. However a more credible version is that it refers to
labourers who worked on lighters in Penang Harbour (S.M. Mohamed Idris,
former president of Penang Lighter Owners Association, interviewed by the
author, 30 May 2008).
7. From whence originates the popular P. Ramlee song “Achi-Achi Buka Pintu”,
says Meera Nagore (Interview, April 2008).
8. The term “Kaka” is commonly used to refer to Malabar Muslims and is used
in Kerala till this day (Narayanan 2002).
9. Nambikai magazine, published in Malaysia, is sold throughout Southeast Asia,
including Laos.
10. Today Penang has at least fifteen long-established Muslim-based social
organizations, including the Iqbal Islamic Association, the Central Muslim
Society, and sports clubs. Among the more prominent ones are:
• United Muslim Association, 1929
• Anjuman Himayathul Islam, 1930
• Persatuan Hidayathul Islam, 1941
• Persatuan Nurul Islam, 1946
• Kadayanathur Muslim Association, 1946
• Penang Muslim League, 1954.
11. Fatimah Hassan says such cross-cultural influences are common among other
ethnic groups in Penang. “It’s not uncommon to find Penang Chinese who
speak ‘pure’ Malay, and Indians and Malays who speak ‘perfect’ Hokkien,”
she adds. (Interview, Fatimah Hassan, 2 June 2008).
12. Masjid India was financed by Indian Muslim merchants who lived and traded
in nearby Batu Road, now known as Jalan Tunku Abdul Rahman (Masjid
India, n.d.).
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13. “Sepoy” is a term of Portuguese-Urdu-Persian origin, referring a private
serving in the army of a foreign conqueror, especially an Indian soldier under
British command in India (The American Heritage Dictionary of the English
Language, Fourth Edition, Houghton Miffin Company, 2009).
14. Variations, namely Jawi Pekan, referring to town dwellers, and Jawi Bukan,
implying a lack of Malayness, have been used in different social context
(Nagata 2006, pp. 519–20).
15. In January 2010 for example, I met a Kuala Lumpur-based Malay overseastrained professional woman of Chinese-Malay parentage. She was married to
a Malay of Indian ancestry, and both of them were originally from Penang. In
the course of a casual conversation (she was not a research respondent), she
teased her ten year-old son in the presence of her husband and me, saying,
“He is half-Mamak because his father is a Merican.” Her demeanour indicated
she was proud of the fact. Her husband did not seem to mind. I could not
help thinking that she was, perhaps unconsciously, socializing her son into
being aware of his Indian ancestry.
16. Ibrahim Vengai (community leader/businessman from Teluk Intan, Perak),
interviewed by the author in Kuala Lumpur, 16 June 2008.
17. Some Indian Muslim students from poor families who gain university and
college places but are unable to secure government financial assistance turn
to community initiatives, including one established by Dr Mohamed Iqbal
and his friends in 1972, which provides loans to deserving students.
18. Random interviews with school students by the author in Rawang District,
Selangor (February 2010), and Penang (June 2008).
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